BUSH RESTS COMFORTABLY AFTER SURGERY TO
IMPLANT PACEMAKER IN BRAIN

Thanks to a device similar to the one in Vice President
Dick Cheney's heart, the nation has healthy, clear-
thinking, plain-speaking leaders again.

By Tom McNichol 


July 13, 2001 | WASHINGTON -- In the second White House
health scare in little more than a week, doctors
Wednesday night implanted a sophisticated pacemaker in
President Bush's brain. The device, known as an
implantable cranial defibrillator, or ICD, continuously
monitors and records the president's brain waves. When
Mr. Bush's brain activity becomes dangerously slow for
a chief executive, the device delivers a mild electric
shock, jolting the president back to a relatively
active mental state.

"I feel good," the president told reporters several
hours after the operation. Bush then twitched
noticeably. "I mean, I feel well," he said.

Doctors say the implant is performing flawlessly,
although they're trying to limit the number of shocks
Bush receives to fewer than 100 a day. The surgery came
barely a week after Vice President Dick Cheney was
fitted with a device to regulate his irregular
heartbeat. 

The White House portrayed last night's medical
procedure as an "insurance policy" against further
problems for the president. At a news conference at
George Washington University Hospital, where the
operation was performed, doctors downplayed the
seriousness of Bush's condition. The periodic electric
jolts from the implant, physicians say, will have
minimal effect on the president.

"His hair is not going to stand on end," said chief
surgeon Dr. Alan J. Thayer. "Well, maybe a little."

The president, looking tired but fit after his
operation, said that the device will help him function
better as a world leader.

"The American people need to know that their president
is equipped to handle a trouble spot like Slovenia,"
Mr. Bush said. "Serbia, I mean Serbia," he added, his
head jerking violently.

Bush has an extensive medical history of moderately
impaired thinking and reasoning, dating back to the
1970s. Doctors have long noted that the president's
thoughts easily become confused, and that his public
pronouncements often deteriorate into a tangle of
mispronunciations, faulty logic and bad grammar.
Although Bush's condition wasn't serious enough to
prevent him from running for president, or from winning
the state of Florida, doctors say his condition has
deteriorated significantly in recent months. The
president's brain wave activity dipped dangerously low
during his recent trip to Europe, and stopped
altogether at one point during a meeting with Russian
president Vladimir Putin. The Russian leader was
unaware of any change in Mr. Bush's condition,
officials say. 

Yesterday, the president's doctors subjected him to a
battery of mental tests to assess his risk of
developing a potentially fatal "zero brain wave"
pattern. 

Once the risk was confirmed, surgeons decided to
implant the electronic device, which acts both as a
pacemaker and a defibrillator. The pacemaker component
is programmed to speed up the president's thinking when
it becomes abnormally slow. The defibrillator can shock
his brain back to a normal state if Bush's thoughts
become "too fast," although doctors say that the
chances of that happening are remote.

The device that doctors sutured to the base of the
president's cerebellum is known as a Medtronic Gem IV
DR model. (There were some problems with an earlier
model, which had to be recalled by the manufacturer.)
Such devices, once the stuff of science fiction, have
become an increasingly common tool in modern neurology.
Hundreds of prominent Americans have been fitted with
so-called mental pacemakers in recent years, including
actor Adam Sandler, TV personality Mary Hart, Yankees
owner George Steinbrenner, singer Britney Spears, Rep.
Gary Condit, D-Calif., former vice president Dan
Quayle, and the entire board of directors of the now-
defunct Pets.com. Some of those who wear a mental
pacemaker expressed hope that the president's condition
would raise public awareness about their circumstance.

"This may turn out to be a blessing in the skies for
all of us," said talk show host Maury Povich, who was
fitted with one of the first Medtronic devices four
years ago. Mr. Povich trembled violently from head to
toe before adding, "I mean disguise, disguise, for
God's sake, turn it off."

Bush has been advised to avoid deep thoughts for a few
days to give the device a chance to settle in place.
Doctors say the president so far has cooperated fully
with the recommendation. Bush has also been told to
alternate holding his cell phone against his right and
left ear so the implant receives equal doses of
radiation from each side. And the president will have
to run at full speed whenever passing through White
House metal detectors.

Several congressional leaders privately expressed
concern about the president's medical procedure, coming
barely a week after Cheney was fitted with a device to
regulate his irregular heartbeat.

But Bush dismissed the worries, stating that the Bush-
Cheney team is "more fit than ever" to lead the
country. 

"You'll find no healthier duo than Dick Cheney and I,"
Bush said. The president hesitated, as if waiting for a
signal, and when none came, broke into a toothy grin.

About the writer 
Tom McNichol is a San Francisco writer whose work has
appeared in the New York Times Magazine, the Washington
Post, Spy, Punch and other publications. His radio
commentaries have aired on National Public Radio's "All
Things Considered."